The volume that always remains in your lungs to prevent complete collapse.
What is residual volume?
The condition that affects the muscles out of the list: emphysema, bronchitis, cystic fibrosis and myositis
What is myositis?
Muscles that are striated and are involuntary.
What are Cardiac muscles?
This is the purpose of shivering.
What is using muscles to generate heat?
This protein functions similarly to a rope in the sarcoplasm.
What is actin?
The primary form in which carbon dioxide is transported through the body.
What is bicarbonate ion?
The machine that doctors can use to diagnose problems in the lungs using different lung volumes.
What is a spirometer?
The biceps and triceps are an example of this type of muscle pair.
What is an antagonistic pair?
The process that should occurs after a person goes to the gym
What is hypertrophy?
This boundary is where the actin is anchored to and is pulled closer to each other during muscle contractions
What is a Z line or Z-disc?
The state of the internal costal muscles when the diaphragm is contracted.
What is relaxed?
What is pneumothorax?
The exchange of gases between your blood and the cells in your ear.
What is internal respiration?
This part of a contraction graph represents the maximal sustained contraction that leads to muscle fatigue.
What is tetanus?
The name of the model for how myofilaments move.
What is the sliding filament model?
The expiratory reserve volume(in mL) of a person who has 5000mL vital capacity, 300mL tidal volume and 2000mL inspiratory reserve volume.
What is 2700mL?
An infection of alveoli in the lungs
What is pneumonia?
The 2 main requirements for respiration in the lungs
What is a moist environment and high surface area?
If Mr. Fudolig were deadlifting 275lbs, he would be primarily engaging this type of muscle fibres.
What is Type II(fast-twitch muscle fibres) muscle?
This compound is required to release the binding between actin and myosin.
What is ATP?
This is the sequence of 5 different body parts, which is the pathway through which air travels through the respiratory pathway from your larynx.
What is the larynx to trachea to bronchi to bronchioles to alveoli?
The process that occurs to a hospital patient's smooth muscle after being bedridden for months.
What is NOTHING?
This sequence of 5 levels describes the different parts of muscles from biggest to smallest
What is muscle to muscle fibre bundles to muscle fibre to myofibrils to myofilaments?
The type of muscles that cause vasodilation and vasoconstriction in your blood vessels
What is Smooth muscle?
This protein is why a calcium deficiency causes muscle weakness.
What is troponin?